Mental-Health-in-Finance

The 'Investor Readiness' Assessment: Why Your Startup Can't Close a Round Until Your Founders Prove Emotional Stability

NEW YORK — If you’re a founder trying to raise Series A funding in 2026, you’ve probably hit a wall you can’t see. You’ve got the perfect pitch deck, market-fit validation, and growth projections. But before the check can clear, your startup needs to pass the “Investor Readiness Assessment” — a comprehensive evaluation of your founder team’s emotional regulation capabilities.

Leading VC firms now mandate that all founders complete three phases of psychological clearance before they can even enter the due diligence phase of a funding round. The assessment includes: 1) A 47-year stress-test proving you haven’t changed your mind about your business model (yes, really), 2) Emotional regulation certification demonstrating you can maintain composure during a pitch despite receiving rejection, and 3) Proof that you can tolerate market volatility without experiencing panic responses that could contaminate the investment portfolio.

The Quarterly Earnings Call Now Requires CFOs to Complete Three Phases of Cognitive Rehabilitation Before They Can Speak

NEW YORK — Before Morgan Stanley’s CFO could deliver his quarterly guidance on Thursday, he was first required to complete an intensive cognitive rehabilitation program administered by the Securities and Exchange Commission’s newly formed Division of Earnings Call Therapy. The procedure, which took 47 hours of behavioral conditioning and 12 separate neurofeedback sessions, was designed to eliminate the “hormonal variance” that causes executives to overshare personal details during earnings presentations.